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Old 03-16-2012, 07:00 AM   #3973 (permalink)
TheBig3
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Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Boston, Massachusetts
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vanilla View Post
I haven't read it yet, but mom just bought me the Marilyn Monroe book called Fragments. It's got letters, poems and note created by her.

I was on a plane to England last week and I had to watch that "One week with Marilyn" movie...I wanted to punch half the cast of that film in the face.

Quote:
Originally Posted by RVCA View Post
In essence, the author analyzes how western civilization evolved from monarchy to democracy and argues that a monarchy is actually the lesser of two evils. Given the dismal state of American politics at the moment... I'm really interested to see what he has to say. This book has been heralded as "one of the most important works of the 20th century".
Yuck. Please let me know how that goes. Anyone who says something as dumb as "look at how politics are...Lets have a KING!" should be barred from publishing.



Quote:
Originally Posted by TheBig3 View Post


Same woman who wrote Water for Elephants.
I finished this and threw up my 2 cents on Good Reads...My review:

I didn't know what I expected reading this, but I didn't expect what I got. Ape House reads like a trashy romance novel based on a half-baked pop political philosophy. The cover says something to the effect of "How different are we from animals?" To give you an idea of what to expect, thats the least subtle correlation in the text. prepare to have this hackneyed connection shoved in your face, mixed in with your dinner, and beat over your head.

While the idea could have had stronger legs, it reads as if the concept was half-written, found to be bankrupt, and completed by filler, but with overly sexualized details or what I can't help but feel was an after thought - the opposite of primitive. L.A. in the book is depicted as a dehumanized wasteland of classless Stepford wives who are forced to abide by a cultural demand that everyone should look similar, and not like themselves. To use a line from the book as summary: "there are no ugly people, just lazy people."

The same could be said for authors.

Like most things the book becomes more offensive the more you realize how good it could have been. The case and the arc of the narrative seem to be a post-reality show Fear & Loathing in Las Vegas if Hunter S. Thompson had created a love child with Jane Goodall and Joan Rivers. And while there are strong moments where Gruen seems to capture the human reaction to real events, all too often there is a stronger demand (on her part) to keep the drama going and not the story. All in all it won't be the worst book you've ever read (far from it) but its not something you're going to remember a year from now unless you're asked about it. It will keep you entertained, like a car crash on the side of the highway, and going in if you know that, you might actually enjoy it more than I did. Just remember: there aren't any bad authors...just lazy ones.
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